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Becoming a Reflective Practitioner
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Main description:

Reflective practice is internationally acknowledged as a significant approach to developing professional practice across health care professions. Becoming a Reflective Practitioner is a practical guide to using reflection both within curriculum and everyday clinical practice.


This completely revised fourth edition uses an even more reflective style, inviting and encouraging the reader to participate in a dialogue with the content. It develops Christopher Johns particular approach to reflective practice through the six dialogical movements and the development of narrative and performance. 


The book features examples taken from everyday practice, which reveal reflection as something lived rather than just a theoretical concept and demonstrate the significant impact of reflection on realising desirable practice. The title also explores areas of key significance for professional health care curricula and development, including the real meaning of fundamental concepts such as "holistic" and "caring".

Key features
 



  • A practical guide to applying the model of structured reflection

  • Reflects significant developments in reflective and narrative theory

  • Examines the nature of ′desirable′ practice and factors that constrain its realisation in clinical practice

  • Develops reflective practice within a curriculum

  • Illuminates reflective practice writing through practitioner examples and case studies

  • Engages practitioners in professional and critical dialogue, encouraging them to take responsibility for developing their clinical practice


Back cover:

Reflective practice is internationally acknowledged as a significant approach to developing professional practice across health care professions. Becoming a Reflective Practitioner is a practical guide to using reflection both within curriculum and everyday clinical practice.


This completely revised fourth edition uses an even more reflective style, inviting and encouraging the reader to participate in a dialogue with the content. It develops Christopher Johns particular approach to reflective practice through the six dialogical movements and the development of narrative and performance. 


The book features examples taken from everyday practice, which reveal reflection as something lived rather than just a theoretical concept and demonstrate the significant impact of reflection on realising desirable practice. The title also explores areas of key significance for professional health care curricula and development, including the real meaning of fundamental concepts such as "holistic" and "caring".

Key features
 



  • A practical guide to applying the model of structured reflection

  • Reflects significant developments in reflective and narrative theory

  • Examines the nature of ′desirable′ practice and factors that constrain its realisation in clinical practice

  • Develops reflective practice within a curriculum

  • Illuminates reflective practice writing through practitioner examples and case studies

  • Engages practitioners in professional and critical dialogue, encouraging them to take responsibility for developing their clinical practice


Contents:

Preface xiii

Acknowledgements xx


1 What is reflective practice? 1


Describing reflection 2


Reflection on experience 2


Mindfulness 3


Prerequisites of reflection 4


Reflexivity 5


Practical wisdom and praxis 5


Contradiction 5


Empowerment 8


Development of voice 9


Silence 9


Received voice 10


The subjective voice 10


The procedural voice 11


The constructed voice 11


Whole brain stuff 12


Knowing reflection 13


Bimadisiwin 14


Critical reflection 14


Transgression 15


Being in place 15


The significance of reflective practices for professional practice 16


Expertise 18


The six dialogical movements 19


The hermeneutic circle 19


Dialogue 20


Evaluating reflection 21


Journal entry 23


Conclusion 23


Notes 24


2 Writing self: the first dialogical movement 25


Mimesis 25


Creative writing 26


Bringing the mind home 27


Dividing the page 28


Commentary 30


Writing rather than telling 30


Tapping the tacit 31


Opening the reflective space through the humanities 32


The therapeutic benefit of writing 33


Notes 34


3 Engaging the reflective spiral: the second dialogical movement 35


Models of reflection 36


Guarding against a prescriptive legacy 36


The model for structured reflection (MSR) 37


What issues are significant to pay attention to? 42


How were others feeling and what made them feel that way? 42


How was I feeling and what made me feel that way? 43


What was I trying to achieve and did I respond effectively? 45


What are the broader consequences of my actions on the patient, others and myself? 46


What knowledge did or might have informed me? 47


To what extent did I act for the best and in tune with my values and beliefs? 47


How does this situation connect with previous experiences? 50


What assumptions govern my practice and what factors influence the way I feel, think and respond within the particular experience? 51


Warshield 53


Stress, anxiety, and coping with work 54


Feeling fluffy feeling drained scale 54


Water butt theory of stress 56


The risk of burnout 57


The looking forward cues 57


Janet writes 57


How might I respond more effectively given this situation again? 59


What would be the consequences of alternative actions for the patient, others and myself? 60


What factors might stop me from responding differently? 60


How do I NOW feel about this experience? 60


Am I now more able to support myself and others better as a consequence? 61


Conclusion 61


Notes 61


4 Framing insights 62


Single lines 63


Framing insights 64


Carper s fundamental ways of knowing 64


The framing perspectives 65


Developmental framing: the being available template 65


The being available template (BAT) 66


Conclusion 68


Note 68


5 The dance with Sophia: the third dialogical movement 69


The dance with Sophia 70


Dialogue as creative play 71


Mapping 71


Narratives of health illness 71


Michael s wife 72


Michael s wife 72


Passing people by 73


Waiting 74


Loneliness 74


Caring 75


Buddhist influence 75


Lifting 75


As if she might shatter 76


Sylvia 76


Sylvia 77


Lorna 79


Conclusion 79


6 Guiding reflection: the fourth dialogical movement 80


Dialogue 80


Why reflection needs to be guided 81


Co–creation of insights 81


The reality wall 82


Contracting 83


What issues need to be contracted? 83


Finding the path 84


The nature of guidance 84


Remoralisation 86


Pulling free 86


Conclusion 87


7 Weaving and performing narrative: the fifth and sixth dialogical movements 88


Fifth dialogical movement 88


Methodology 88


Narrative form 89


Creativity 90


Fiction 91


Coherence 91


Sixth dialogical movement 92


Change value of narrative 93


Conclusion 94


Note 94


8 The reflective curriculum 95


The community of inquiry 96


Collaboration 96


Peers 96


Potential benefits of a reflective curriculum 97


Potential constraints to the reflective curriculum 98


Theory practice gap 98


Imagining the shape of a reflective curriculum 99


Guided reflection groups 101


Dialogue 102


The talking stick 102


Skilled guides 103


Storytelling 103


Art workshops 104


Performance 104


Jane s rap 104


Imagine 105


The rub 105


Journal entry 1 106


Journal entry 2 107


Honour thy mother 107


Journal entry 3 110


Journal entry 4 111


Judging reflective writing 115


Programmes 115


Conclusion 116


Notes 116


9 Reflection on touch and the environment 117


Touch 117


Commentary 120


Environment (Jill) 121


Conclusion 124


10 The emotional cost of caring 125


Simon writes 125


Commentary 129


Note 130


11 Life begins at 40 131


Clare writes 131


Electrocardiographs (ECGs) 131


Insight 135


Reflection 136


12 Balancing the wind or a lot of hot air 138


Jim writes 138


Mary 139


The pain clinic referral 140


Mary s family 140


Reflection 144


13 A reflective framework for clinical practice 146


The Burford NDU model: caring in practice 146


Vision 146


Valid vision 149


The nature of caring 149


Suffering 150


Nurturing growth 150


Knowing caring 150


The internal environment of practice 152


Social utility 152


From vision to reality 153


A structural view of a refl ective framework for clinical practice 154


A system to ensure the vision is realised within each clinical moment 154


Wavelength theory 156


The Burford NDU reflective cues 157


Tony 158


Who is this person? 159


What meaning does this health event have for the person? 160


How is this person feeling? 160


How has this event affected their usual life pattern and roles? 160


How do I feel about this person? 161


How can I help this person? 161


What is important for this person to make his stay in the hospice comfortable? 162


What support does this person have in life? 162


How does this person view the future? 162


Reflection on being available to Tony 163


A system to ensure effective communication 163


Narrative notes 164


Talk 164


Reflective handover 164


Bedside handover 165


Patient notes 166


Narrative 168


A reflective quality system to ensure effective practice 169


A system to ensure staff are enabled to realise the vision as a lived reality 169


Organisational culture 170


Conclusion 170


Notes 170


14 Reflective leadership 171


A little voice in a big arena 172


Reflection 175


Transformational leadership 178


Power 178


Journal entry realising our power 179


Journal entry self–deception 180


Refl ective leadership 181


The learning organisation 182


Vision 184


Vision, what vision? 184


Conclusion 184


Notes 185


15 Teetering on the edge of chaos 186


Lazell writes 187


Newtonian knowing: The machine in parts 187


Complexity learning and knowledge cycles 189


Choice 190


Maps, strange attractors and learning through leadership 192


Conclusions: Where chaos and leadership fuse 193


Commentary 195


Conclusion 196


Notes 196


16 Ensuring quality 197


Reflective approaches 198


Clinical audit 198


Project 199


Model for reflective inquiry (MRI) 199


Debriefing 200


Standards of care 201


Standards group 202


Nutrition 202


Sleep 204


Relatives 204


Confidentiality 206


The value of standards of care 207


Conclusion 209


Note 210


17 Clinical supervision 211


Sustaining practitioners 212


Bumping heads 213


Revealing woozles 213


Four variables of clinical supervision 213


Voluntary or mandatory 214


Group versus individual supervision 214


Single or multi–professional 215


Who should the supervisor be? 215


Peer supervision 217


Contracting 218


Emancipatory or technical supervision 219


John Heron 221


The nine–step model 222


Pragmatics of clinical supervision 223


Karen 224


Trudy 224


Session 1 225


Commentary 226


Session 2 226


Commentary 228


Session 3 228


Commentary 229


Session 4 229


Commentary 231


Session 5 231


Commentary 232


Session 6 232


Commentary 234


A quiet eddy 234


Notes 234


18 Tales of clinical supervision 235


Michelle 235


Commentary 237


Cathy and the GPs 238


Exploring perspectives 240


Hank s complaint 248


Horizontal violence 251


Conclusion 252


Notes 252


19 Therapeutic journalling for patients 253


Moira Vass 253


My refl ection 253


Therapeutic benefit 257


Facilitating therapeutic writing 258


Conclusion 259


20 Nurse bully and the timid sheep: an adventure in storyboard 260


Conclusion 269


21 Reflective prose poetry 270


Notes 279


22 Through a glass darkly 280


Introduction 280


Performance design 280


Giving voice 280


Through a glass darkly preamble 281


Through a glass darkly 282


The first gate 283


The second gate 284


The third gate 285


The fourth gate 286


The fifth gate 287


The sixth gate 288


Notes 290


Appendix Clinical supervision evaluation tool 293


References 297


Index 311


PRODUCT DETAILS

ISBN-13: 9780470674260
Publisher: John Wiley & Sons Ltd (Wiley–Blackwell)
Publication date: May, 2013
Pages: 328
Weight: 728g
Availability: Not available (reason unspecified)
Subcategories: Nursing

MEET THE AUTHOR

Christopher Johns is Professor of Nursing at the University of Bedfordshire, Bedfordshire, UK, and Director of the PhD School for reflective practice, performance and narrative. He is also convenor of the International Reflective Practice conferences and Reflective Gatherings.

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